Since starting this blog at 35 years of age in 2009 I have never revealed my portfolio values or targets in £ terms. Rightly or wrongly I've always believed that it was irrelevant to readers given we all have different earnings, investments, risk profiles, savings rates and target retirement amounts. This has resulted in posts that always focus on the theory and how I'm applying it but that in hindsight come across as dry and impersonal.
Today I'm going to try and change that by starting to talk in real numbers rather than percentages. My hope is that it will up the debate a little and help us all continue to learn from each other. I just hope it doesn't kill the community that has developed over the past 5 or so years. Given the name of this blog and my closeness to FIRE (financially independent retired early) the amount of wealth I am trying to accrue is probably the number that is currently most important to me and probably one of the most popular topics debated/discussed within personal finance blogs and forums. So let’s start there.
As a person who does not plan on receiving a State Pension and is not going to be receiving any sort of inheritance it is a crucial number for me as to fully FIRE it needs to be enough to last my family and I for the rest of my life. That could be 45 or more years. The methodology to calculate it was first devised back in 2007 when I first started on my DIY FIRE journey and went like this:
Today I'm going to try and change that by starting to talk in real numbers rather than percentages. My hope is that it will up the debate a little and help us all continue to learn from each other. I just hope it doesn't kill the community that has developed over the past 5 or so years. Given the name of this blog and my closeness to FIRE (financially independent retired early) the amount of wealth I am trying to accrue is probably the number that is currently most important to me and probably one of the most popular topics debated/discussed within personal finance blogs and forums. So let’s start there.
As a person who does not plan on receiving a State Pension and is not going to be receiving any sort of inheritance it is a crucial number for me as to fully FIRE it needs to be enough to last my family and I for the rest of my life. That could be 45 or more years. The methodology to calculate it was first devised back in 2007 when I first started on my DIY FIRE journey and went like this:
- I was renting in London, as I still am today and though of London as home
- I asked myself what a good salary would be that would enable me to live well including covering rent or mortgage payments. That number was £30,000
- As I worked towards FIRE I would increase that salary annually by inflation. Today that salary within my Excel spreadsheet is £37,691
- I calculated what I expected my portfolio to return annually in real terms. This number still dynamically calculates in my Excel spreadsheet every week when I update my financial position. That number after expenses was 3.8%. A number I later learnt wasn't so far from the (in)famous 4% Rule